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Hard to believe it’s the same species. But the chinook
salmon, conservation heartbreak of the U.S. West Coast, is invading and
thriving in
Chinook, or king salmon, largest of the five North American salmon
species, reached South America some 25 years ago as people tried to farm them
there, says Cristián Correa of McGill University in Montreal. Now a broad
survey of records and stream visits finds chinook reproducing on their own in
at least 10 Andean watersheds that empty into the Pacific plus more along the
coast, and three Atlantic watersheds, Correa and Mart Gross of the
The dearth of the same species, Oncorhynchus tschawytscha, so alarmed U.S. government fisheries
managers this year that they closed both commercial and recreational chinook fisheries
off California and much of Oregon for 2008. Of 17 chinook populations in the U.S.
Northwest, two rank as endangered and seven as threatened on the
The news of chinook colonizing South America “absolutely,
unequivocally proves how stupid we’ve been in managing our fish,” says Jack A.
Stanford, who directs the
Unlike their North American relatives, the South American chinook don’t have to cope with dams, extensive fishing and genetic mixing with hatchery fish that dilute the wild stock’s local adaptations, Stanford says.
The South American fish also find cool mountain rivers and rich offshore feeding grounds in the southern part of the continent, Correa says.
To trace the spread of chinook, Correa interviewed passionate anglers along the Chilean coast, scrutinizing their photos of trophy fish and scouring written records. Then he surveyed rivers himself finding dozens and in rare places a hundred chinook swimming in a stretch of river the length of a city block.
Commercial operations in South America had raised chinook but now rely mostly on other salmon species, one piece of evidence Correa sites for saying the fish he saw weren’t farm escapees, but members of a population that sustains itself in the wild. Also the ones he examined didn’t have the eroded fins typical of farm fish, and he found them in some remote watersheds. He reports witnessing chinook creating nests and spawning in rivers he visited.
Correa and Gross “are right in identifying chinook as a
particularly invasive species,” says Miguel Pascual of
Chinook probably won’t colonize much farther north than
The exotic chinook adds punch to other fish invasions
already slamming rivers in
Correa frets that most of the southern region's river systems used to run on a sparse budget of nutrients. He says he's not sure what will happen to their ecosystems as the salmon return to breed and die, bringing massive seasonal pulses of nutrients.
“Salmon are voracious,” Pascual says. He and his colleagues have found that salmon at sea overlap in diet with established species such as the penguins along the southern Patagonian shelf. He hesitates to predict that that salmon would hog the food, but he does say, “we should scrutinize them closely.”
Chinook salmon have gone wild in
The invasions could have silver lining for science. In
Found in: Biology, Ecology, Life and Zoology
-
I was under the impression that they were pretty specific about returning to the river they came from. How is it that they are invading new watersheds unless someone is carrying the eggs or breeders there?
Daniel Miller
Jun. 24, 2008 at 4:38pm
- Lifecycle with portraits
link - Conservation status of Chinook salmon from NOAA
link - Chinook fact sheet from NOAA
link - Becker, Leandro A., M A. Pascual, N. G. Basso. 2007 Colonization of the Southern Patagonia Ocean by Exotic Chinook Salmon. Conservation Biology 21 (5) , 1347–1352 doi:10.1111/j.1523-1739.2007.00761.x
link - Di Prinzio, C. Y., and M. A. Pascual. 2008. The establishment of exotic Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in Pacific rivers of Chubut,
Patagonia, Argentina. Annales de Limnologie International Journal of
Limnology 44:25-32. - Soto, Doris, I. Arismendi, C. Di Prinzio and F. Jara. 2007. Establishment of Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in Pacific basins of southern South America and its potential ecosystem implications. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 80: 81-98.
link
- Correa, Cristian and Mart Gross. 2008. Chinook salmon invade southern South America. Biological Invasions. Vol.10, No. 5 , June.1387-3547 (Print) 1573-1464 (Online
doi” 10.1007/s10530-007-9157-2
link
